Real Estate For Sale at Spruce Creek

In foreclosure auctions there are winners and there are losers. If you are careful you can end up with a winner and walk away with a home at 20-50% off the price. Or, you can get carried away in a bidding frenzy and purchase a property at just a small discount. In the latter case you may wind up with a house you should not have bought in the first place...You can get a real steal at a house foreclosure sale—or you can overpay for a money pit. Here’s how to avoid the latter.

Step 1: Know your actions

Know your auctions. At a sheriff’s, trustee’s, or courthouse auction, you can’t inspect the property in advance; no information is provided on the property; you’ll need to pay much or all of your bid on the spot, in cash or a cashier’s check; and it will be your problem to evict the tenants! But this is where you’ll find the deep discounts.

Step 2: Play it safe

If you want to play it safe, go to an auction house sale. The bank already owns these properties (so you won’t have to kick anyone out), and you’re usually allowed to inspect the premises beforehand. But this comfort level comes at a price—you’ll typically pay 90% to 95% of the market value.

Step 3: Expect the worst

Expect the worst with any house you buy at auction. If a homeowner couldn’t afford his mortgage, it’s reasonable to expect he wasn’t keeping up with maintenance and repairs, either.

TIP: Be aware that homeowners who are forced out of their houses sometimes express their bitterness by taking with them anything that isn’t nailed down, leading to huge (and unanticipated) repair bills for the new owner.

Step 4: Do a drive-through

Drive through the neighborhood of any foreclosed home you’re considering. If the area is teeming with foreclosure signs, prices are likely to fall even farther. It also may be the sign of an area on the decline.

Step 5: Check what you can

Check out as much as you can about the house in advance of the auction. If you’re allowed to do an inspection, take a contractor with you; he’ll be able to give you a ballpark number on the repairs you’re looking at. Check if there are any liens on the home. Review the title search. Know what other homes in the area are worth.

Step 6: Have cash

Be prepared to pay on the spot a 5% deposit, in cash or a cashier’s check, if you have the winning bid at an auction house sale. At a sheriff’s sale, you might have to pony up the full amount.

TIP: Have realistic expectations. Banks aren’t in the business of giving away homes, so if a price sounds too good to be true, it probably is.

Step 7: Come with pre-approved financing

Come with pre-approved financing, even if the auction doesn’t demand it. If you make the winning bid and then find you can’t get financing, you’ll still be legally responsible for paying 25% of your bid!

Step 8: Look affluent

Attend the auction in your most expensive clothes. It will trick other buyers into thinking there’s no point in getting into a bidding war with you.

Step 9: Set a limit

Set a limit as to what you’ll bid so you don’t end up overpaying for a house simply because you got caught up in the heat of the moment.

Step 10: Avoid nasty surprises

Know the rules of your auction. If you win a bid, do you have time to change your mind, or will you have to pay a penalty if you back out? Is there a “reserve amount”—an amount below which the owner does not have to sell, even if you won the bidding? Is there a “buyer premium”—an additional 5% to 10% you have to pay the auction house?

Step 11: Jump right in

Jump right in when the bidding starts—assuming you like the house. Homes sold at the beginning of an auction typically go for less money than those sold at the end.

FACT: Due to the 2007 real estate market crash, the Senate voted to give a $7,000 tax credit to anybody who buys a foreclosed home. Check with your tax advisor for details.

Watch this MSNBC video with expert tips for those venturing into real estate auctions. The real estate expert explains the best techniques from how to dress for maximum effect to how to keep your emotions in check and when to make your bid for that dream home…

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Offer on a REO...advice please.am willing to pay more but since it is a REO, I have been told not to offer more than asking.

Here is the situation. Asking price is $439,900. The bank aquired the property at $455,000.

Is it in our best interest to:

1. Offer exactly what they are asking and ask for nothing else.

2. Offer $10,000 more BUT ask for $10,000 back in closing costs.

3. Any other suggestions?

For us, choice #2 would be best since it would put more cash in our pocket to cover replacing the human urine soiled carpet and graffitied walls :) However, if option 1 is best, we will do that... we WANT this home!

FIRST Find the value of the property. What the bank "paid" or bid at the foreclosure auction may have nothing to do with the property's actual value. Engage the services of an agent to get advice and at least a rough CMA to give you an idea of what the property would be worth. Without knowing how much the property is worth within reason, "adding or substracting" $10,000 from the asking price means nothing. A possible scenario is that the bank is aware they screwed up on loaning way over a property's worth, and some VP in the bank is concerned with his job, so he bids "what they are owed"...

SECOND, armed with solid information, meet with the decision maker at the bank. Discuss and negotiate based on your findings and not on "what the bank paid". The bank knows it's upside down on this deal and they are only trying to salvage as much money as possible. Timing is on your side, if you can offer a clean, no-contingencies, rapid-closure offer, they are much likely to take much less than the loan they had on the property.

The property could be worth 300K... so IT IS IMPERATIVE to find out and research well what it's really worth. I cannot overemphasize the importance to get local expertise to assist you.

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